The party proudly traces its roots to the radical students of 1919.
In the late 1960s, the university was the scene of protests by radical students.
Nine thousand officers were used to halt the march by about 2,000 radical students and other dissidents.
Some said the department was run by radical black students.
This was not a radical student, but someone who, like most of us, wanted to get on with the productive advancement of his life.
This spring began like others, with radical students mounting protests.
By this time the organization had grown, and started attracting radical students.
In 1966 the magazine was taken over by a group of radical students.
Wallelign soon became involved in the radical student groups that were proliferating at the University.
The most radical students often found themselves in conflict with more conservative Red Guards.